TLDR
Reserve studies are legally required or strongly recommended in more than 40 states, yet most HOA software ignores the implementation side entirely. The tools in this category split into two distinct types: licensed reserve study firms that produce the actual reserve study report, and HOA platforms that track the recommendations after the report is done. Boards typically need both.
BoardStack
BoardStack is an HOA financial management platform that tracks reserve study recommendations, calculates percent-funded status, and flags funding gaps against the reserve study contribution schedule. It does not produce reserve study reports — that requires a licensed reserve study professional. BoardStack handles everything that comes after the study: recording annual contributions, tracking actual balances against projected targets, and generating treasurer reports showing reserve funding status.
Pros
- ✓ Percent-funded calculation against reserve study targets updated monthly
- ✓ Fund accounting enforces separation of operating and reserve funds at the database layer
- ✓ Flat pricing by community size with no per-unit fees
- ✓ Reserve funding gap alerts when actual contributions fall behind the study schedule
Cons
- × Not a reserve study firm — does not produce the original reserve study report
- × Newer to market (2026)
Pricing: $20–$99/mo flat
Verdict: Best for implementing and tracking reserve study recommendations month to month
Reserve Advisors
Reserve Advisors is one of the largest reserve study firms in the United States, serving community associations in all 50 states. They perform on-site inspections, analyze component useful life and replacement cost, and deliver a reserve study that satisfies state statutory requirements. Their online client portal lets boards review the study findings and run funding scenario projections between study cycles.
Pros
- ✓ Licensed reserve study professionals credentialed by APRA and CAI RS
- ✓ National coverage with local inspectors in all 50 states
- ✓ Online portal for reviewing component schedules and funding scenarios
- ✓ Satisfies Florida SIRS requirements and other state mandates
Cons
- × Not an HOA management platform — you still need software to track implementation
- × Per-study fee with no ongoing tracking included after delivery
- × Turnaround time varies by market and schedule availability
Pricing: $1,200–$3,500+ per study (varies by community size and location)
Verdict: Best choice for boards that need a professionally credentialed reserve study to satisfy a state mandate
Association Reserves
Association Reserves is the largest reserve study firm in the United States by volume, completing more than 50,000 reserve studies across all 50 states. Founded in 1986, they hold CAI RS designation (Reserve Specialist) and are accredited by APRA. They offer Level I full studies, Level II update studies with site visit, and Level III update studies without site visit — each meeting different statutory and lender requirements.
Pros
- ✓ Largest reserve study firm in the US with the most established track record
- ✓ All three study levels available including Level III no-site-visit updates
- ✓ CAI Reserve Specialist (RS) credentialed analysts
- ✓ Accepted by Fannie Mae and FHA lenders for condo certifications
Cons
- × Cost is higher than smaller regional firms for the same study level
- × Online tools are client portal only — no integration with HOA management software
- × Scheduling lead times can extend to several weeks in high-demand markets
Pricing: $1,500–$4,000+ per study (varies by level and community size)
Verdict: Best for boards that need a reserve study with maximum lender and state credibility, especially for Fannie Mae or FHA condo certifications
Kipcon
Kipcon is a national reserve study and building inspection firm that combines professional engineering with reserve study services. They are particularly strong for condominiums that need both a reserve study and a structural inspection — relevant under Florida SB 4-D requirements for condos three stories or taller. Their engineers are licensed in multiple states and can produce the Structural Integrity Reserve Study (SIRS) that Florida now mandates for qualifying condos.
Pros
- ✓ Licensed engineers who can perform structural inspections alongside the reserve study
- ✓ Specifically qualified to produce Florida SIRS reports for condos three stories or taller
- ✓ Combined engineering and reserve study reduces vendor coordination
- ✓ Serves boards in the mid-Atlantic, Southeast, and nationally
Cons
- × Higher cost than non-engineering reserve study firms for standard studies
- × Less appropriate for communities that only need a routine reserve study without structural review
- × Regional concentration — turnaround may vary outside primary service areas
Pricing: $2,000–$5,000+ per study (engineering firms typically cost more than pure reserve study firms)
Verdict: Best for Florida condominiums that need a Structural Integrity Reserve Study or any community that needs engineering expertise alongside the reserve analysis
Vantaca
Vantaca is an enterprise community association management platform built for professional management companies running large portfolios. It includes reserve tracking and reserve study import functionality alongside full general ledger accounting. The platform is designed for full-time professional managers, not volunteer boards, and the pricing reflects that.
Pros
- ✓ Reserve fund tracking with study import capability
- ✓ Deep accounting module with audit trail
- ✓ Vendor and work order management alongside financial tools
- ✓ Scales across portfolios of 500+ communities for management companies
Cons
- × Pricing starts at $300–500+/month and is quote-based — prohibitive for self-managed boards
- × Designed for professional management company workflows, steep learning curve for volunteers
- × Overkill for a single self-managed community that only needs reserve tracking
Pricing: $300–500+/mo (quote-based)
Verdict: Best for professional management companies that manage reserve study compliance across large portfolios — not appropriate for self-managed volunteer boards
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Start Free TrialWhy Reserve Study Software Is a Two-Part Problem
A reserve study and reserve tracking are not the same thing. Boards that understand this distinction avoid two common mistakes: hiring a reserve study firm and then losing track of their recommendations, or buying HOA software and assuming it replaces the need for a professional reserve study.
The reserve study is the report. A licensed professional — typically credentialed as a CAI Reserve Specialist (RS) or certified by the Association of Professional Reserve Analysts (APRA) — inspects your community’s components, estimates useful life and replacement cost, and calculates the annual contribution rate needed to fund replacements without a special assessment. This report is what state statutes require. It is what Fannie Mae and FHA lenders require to certify a condominium for mortgage lending. It cannot be replaced by software your board runs internally.
Reserve tracking is everything that comes after. Once you have the study, someone needs to record monthly contributions to the reserve fund, compare the actual balance against the study’s projected target, calculate percent-funded status, and alert the board when contributions fall behind. This is the ongoing financial management work — and it is where most boards fail. The study collects dust in a filing cabinet while the reserve fund drifts underfunded.
BoardStack handles the tracking side. The reserve study firms on this list handle the report side.
The Legal Stakes in 2026
Reserve study requirements have tightened significantly since the 2021 Surfside condominium collapse. Florida’s SB 4-D created mandatory Structural Integrity Reserve Studies (SIRS) for condominiums three stories or taller, with full reserve funding required starting December 31, 2024. Boards that did not comply face daily fines and potential personal liability for directors.
California Civil Code 5550 requires a reserve study every three years with an annual review. Nevada NRS 116 mandates a reserve funding disclosure in financial statements. Washington RCW 64.34.382 requires reserve studies for condominiums. Fannie Mae updated its condo project approval guidelines (Form 1076) to require evidence of adequate reserve funding as a condition of mortgage eligibility — meaning an underfunded reserve can block homeowner sales in your community.
The cost of non-compliance is no longer theoretical. Boards need both the study from a credentialed professional and ongoing tracking to show the reserve fund is following the funding schedule.
How to Read This List
The five tools below are divided into two groups:
Reserve study firms (Association Reserves, Reserve Advisors, Kipcon) produce the official report. You hire them once, typically every three to five years. They satisfy state mandates and lender requirements. They do not provide ongoing monthly tracking.
HOA management platforms (BoardStack, Vantaca) track the reserve study output month to month. They calculate percent-funded status, flag funding gaps, and generate the reserve compliance reports boards present at annual meetings. They do not replace the need for a professional study.
Most boards will use one entry from each group. The reserve study firm produces the report; the HOA platform tracks implementation.
Key Questions Before You Buy
Before selecting a reserve study firm, confirm they hold CAI RS or APRA credentials, ask whether they carry errors and omissions insurance, verify they can produce the specific study level your state requires (Level I, II, or III under APRA standards), and confirm they are familiar with your state’s specific statutory requirements.
Before selecting a reserve tracking platform, confirm it separates operating and reserve funds in the accounting system (commingling is a fiduciary violation), verify it can import or manually enter the component schedule from your reserve study, and check whether it calculates percent-funded status automatically against the study’s annual funding targets.
The Percent-Funded Calculation
Percent funded = current reserve balance divided by the fully funded reserve balance (what should be in the fund per the reserve study schedule). The CAI considers 70–100% adequate, 30–69% marginal, and below 30% critically underfunded.
A board should know this number every month, not just at annual review. BoardStack calculates it automatically as contributions and withdrawals are recorded. Reserve study firms provide the target numbers; the platform applies them to your actual balances.
| Tool | Type | Price | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| BoardStack | HOA platform with reserve tracking | $20–$99/mo flat | Tracking reserve study recommendations and percent-funded status |
| Reserve Advisors | Reserve study firm | $1,200–$3,500+ per study | State-mandated reserve study with national coverage |
| Association Reserves | Reserve study firm | $1,500–$4,000+ per study | Fannie Mae and FHA condo certifications requiring credentialed study |
| Kipcon | Engineering firm with reserve studies | $2,000–$5,000+ per study | Florida SIRS condos needing structural inspection plus reserve study |
| Vantaca | Enterprise HOA management platform | $300–500+/mo (quote) | Management companies tracking reserves across large portfolios |
Q&A
Which states require reserve studies for HOA or condo boards?
More than 40 states either require reserve studies by statute or strongly recommend them under state HOA or condo laws. Florida SB 4-D (2022) added mandatory Structural Integrity Reserve Studies for condominiums three stories or taller, with full reserve funding required by December 2025. California Civil Code 5550 requires a reserve study every three years. Washington RCW 64.34.382 requires reserve studies for condominiums. Nevada NRS 116 mandates reserve funding for common interest communities. Boards in any state should check current state statute and consult with a licensed reserve study professional before assuming a study is optional.
Q&A
How much does a professional reserve study cost?
A full Level I reserve study from a credentialed firm typically costs $1,200 to $4,000 for most communities, depending on size, number of components, location, and the firm. Engineering firms like Kipcon that combine structural inspection with the reserve study cost more, often $2,000 to $5,000 or higher for large condominiums. Level III no-site-visit update studies are cheaper, often $600 to $1,500. Reserve study cost should be budgeted as an operating expense, not a reserve expense, since it is a recurring management activity rather than a capital replacement.
- State-specific compliance
- Board-ready reporting and audit packs
- Meetings, governance, and owner workflows
Frequently asked
Common questions before you try it
What is reserve study software?
Do HOA boards need separate reserve study software?
How often do HOA boards need to update their reserve study?
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Start Free TrialSources and Review Notes
BoardStack cites the sources used for this page and records the last review date for each reference.
- Reserve Studies: What They Are and Why They Matter
Community Associations Institute (CAI)
- National Reserve Study Standards
Association of Professional Reserve Analysts (APRA)
- Florida SB 4-D: Structural Integrity Reserve Study Requirements
Florida Legislature